ENNIS:
Unisex name derived from the name of a town in Ireland, from the
word inis, meaning "island." As a personal name it is also
spelled Innis.

ENOLA:
English name of the
B-29 bomber that dropped the atomic bomb, "Little Boy," on
Hiroshima on August 6, 1945. The pilot, Colonel Paul W. Tibbets, Jr. named
the aircraft after his mother, Enola Gay Tibbets, who in turn had been named
after the heroine of a novel; it is the reverse spelling of the word "alone."

ENYO
(Ενυώ): Greek counterpart of Roman
Latin Bellona,
meaning "warlike." In mythology, this is the name of a goddess of war known as the "waster of cities,"
depicted as being covered in blood and carrying weapons. She was a companion
of Ares and is sometimes said to be his sister or mother.

EOFORHILD:
Anglo-Saxon name composed of the Old English
elements eofor "boar" and hild "battle,"
hence "boar-battle."

EOS
(Ἠώς): Greek name
meaning "dawn." In mythology, this is the name of the goddess of
dawn. Equated with Latin Aurora.

EOWYN:
Old English Tolkien invented name, meaning
"horse-friend."

EPHAH:
Anglicized form of Hebrew unisex Eyphah,
meaning "darkness" or "gloomy." In the bible, this is the name of
several characters, including a son of Midian
and one of Caleb's concubines.

EPIPHANY:
English religious name, meaning simply "epiphany."

EPONA:
Celtic name composed of the
Gaulish elements epos "horse" and epa
"mare," hence "horse-mare." In mythology, this is
the name of a goddess of horses and fertility.

EPONINE:
This is the name of the eldest daughter of the Thénardiers in Victor Hugo's Les Misérables,
which is probably an equine-related name.

ÉTAÍN: Irish name
derived from the word éadan, Old
Irish étan, cognate with Gaelic aodann ("face"),
Latin ante
("against") and Sanskrit ánti ("opposite"). Étaín
is the heroine of The Wooing of Étaín. She is the daughter of Ailill, king of the
Ulaid, second wife to Midir, whose first wife, the jealous Fuamnach, turns her into a pool of
water, then a worm, and finally a beautiful butterfly.

ETTA:
Short form of longer Latin names that end with the diminutive suffix -etta,
meaning "little."

ETTIE:
English pet form of Persian Esther, meaning
"star." Also used as a pet form of longer names ending with the
diminutive suffixes -etta and -ette, meaning
"little."

EUADNE
(Ευαδνη): Greek name composed of
the elements eu "good, well" and adnos
"holy," hence "good and holy." In mythology, this is the
name of the wife of Capaneus
who burned herself alive on her husband's pyre.

EUNICE:
Latin form of Greek Eunike, meaning "good
victory." In the New Testament bible, this is the name of Timothy's
mother.

EUNIKE
(Εὐνίκη):
Greek name composed of the elements eu "good" and nike
"victory," hence "good victory." In the New Testament bible, this is the name of
Timothy's
mother.

EUPHEME:
Anglicized form of Greek Euphêmê, meaning "Well I speak." In mythology, this is the name of a goddess of good omen,
praise, and shouts of triumph.

EUPHÊMÊ
(Εύφημη):
Greek name composed of the elements eu
"good, well" and phemi "I speak," hence
"Well I speak." In mythology, this is the name of a goddess of good omen,
praise, and shouts of triumph.

EUPHROSYNE: Latin form of Greek
Euphrosynê,
meaning "joy, mirth." In mythology, this is the name of one of the three
Graces.

EUPHROSYNÊ
(Ευφροσύνη): Greek name meaning "joy, mirth."
In mythology, this is the name of one of the three Graces.

EUPRAXIA
(Ευπραξία):
Greek name composed of the elements eu "good," and praxis
"action, exercise, practice," hence "good conduct." In
mythology, this is the name of a goddess or spirit of good conduct.

EURIA:
Basque name meaning "rain."

EUROPA:
Latin form of Greek Europe, meaning "wide-faced." In mythology,
this is the name of the mother of Minos
and the name from which the continent of Europe was derived.

EUROPE (Ευρώπη):
Greek name composed of the
elements euro "wide" and opsis "face, a sight,
a view," hence "wide-faced." In mythology, this is the name of the mother of
Minos and the name from which the continent of Europe was derived.

EURYDIKE
(Ευρυδίκη):
Greek name composed of
the elements eurys "wide" and dike
"justice," hence "wide justice." In mythology, this is
the name of several characters, including the wives of
Acrisius, Creon, Nestor, and
Orpheus.

EURYNOME:
Greek name meaning "far-ruling." In Orphic mythology, this was the
name of the goddess-queen of the world before Rhea and
Cronus
cast her and her husband Ophion into
Tartarus.

EUTERPE
(Ευτέρπη): Greek name meaning "delight." In mythology, this is the
name of one of the Muses fathered by Zeus,
known as the "giver of pleasure."

EUTHALIA
(Ευθαλία): Greek name composed of the word eu
"good, well" and the name Thalia
"blooming, flourishing," hence
"well-blooming/flourishing." This is the also the name of some species of butterflies.